This is the d’var Torah I delivered at Congregation Neveh Shalom on January 30, 2026.
There are weeks when the Torah feels like a metaphor, and there are weeks when it feels like a live news feed. This is a live news feed week. Shabbat Shirah arrives just as we mark the return of the final hostage, and suddenly the word “unprecedented” feels laughably insufficient. Crossing the sea didn’t come with a user manual, and neither did living through this moment. Being Jewish right now. At the same time, honestly, it’s a very Jewish moment – the kind where you want to sing, cry, and ask God a few pointed questions, probably in that order.
Parshat Beshalach gives us the dramatic climax of the Exodus story. The Israelites stand trapped between Pharaoh’s army and the sea. Panic sets in. Complaints fly. Moses prays. God responds, somewhat tersely, “Why are you crying out to Me? Tell the people to move forward.” The sea splits, the people cross, and only after they are safe do they break into song: Shirat HaYam, the Song at the Sea. This is not a calm or tidy redemption. It is loud, emotional, and deeply human.
Shabbat Shirah teaches us something essential about Jewish song: it does not come before the danger, but after survival. The Israelites don’t sing as a plea while the Egyptians are still chasing them. They sing once they reach the other side, shaken, stunned, and alive. And even then, the song is complicated. It holds awe and fear together, relief and disbelief in the same breath.
Miriam leads with timbrels because, apparently, she packed musical instruments while fleeing slavery. Faith, it turns out, sometimes looks like irrational optimism and emotional overpacking. The midrash suggests she believed there would be something worth singing about, even if she couldn’t yet imagine how.
This week, as the final hostage is returned, we are standing in that same in-between space. Not healed. Not finished. But on the far shore of something that felt endless. Like the Israelites, we didn’t know how this would end. And like them, we discover that survival doesn’t erase fear; it teaches us how to carry it differently.
So on this Shabbat Shirah, we sing.
Not because everything is resolved.
Not because the world feels safe.
But because we reached this moment together.
We sing because silence would be dishonest.
We sing because gratitude and grief can coexist.
We sing because Jewish history reminds us that even after miracles, there is still wilderness ahead, and we don’t walk it alone.
May we keep finding our voices.
May we keep walking forward, even when the path is unclear.
And may we always have our instruments with us, forever hopeful that eventually we will sing our song: imperfect, emotional, and real.